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Higher Ed Data Breaches at Near-Record High in 2012

By Dian Schaffhauser

03/21/13

Nobody knows who will win the NCAA Men's Division Basketball Championship; the final game won't happen until April 6. But just as surely as bracket mania strikes the country this month in response to college basketball, so too does Application Security release the final rankings of this year's dubious roster of higher education "data breach madness" winners. These are colleges and universities that have experienced a notable data breach in 2012.

To develop its rankings, the company used publicly reported data breaches compiled by Privacy Rights Clearinghouse. The bracket format reflects the number of personal records affected by each breach. The larger the breach, the further each institution advanced in the "tournament," until an eventual "champion" was crowned.

The results were released by TeamShatter, the company's research arm. Researchers there noted a "substantial uptick" in total records breached. In 2012, the count was nearly two million, a tally surpassed only in 2006, which had a reported 2.03 million records breached. (Tracking by Privacy Rights Clearinghouse began in 2005.)

The company cited a finding by Ponemon Institute, which researches the costs of data breaches. The average cost per compromised record in an education environment is $142, which puts the cost of the U Nebraska data breach at about $92 million, according to Application Security.

"When we look back at the higher education data breaches in 2012, we can see that the hackers are clearly getting smarter at stealing data," said Alex Rothacker, director of TeamShatter's security research. "The reported breaches remain on the low side, yet the stolen data is over three times what we saw in 2011."

In the case of U Nebraska, an undergraduate student there was charged with hacking into a protected computer system. According to the university, "this was a skilled attack on our system that was discovered and shut down within hours of its discovery."

The University of North Carolina at Charlotte suffered two breaches, one caused by a system misconfiguration and incorrect access settings, which resulted in data being accessible on the Internet, and the other in which files containing sensitive data were stored in a manner that left contents open to the Internet.

At Arizona State, an encrypted file containing user names and passwords was downloaded by an unauthorized person. And at Northwest Florida State, hackers accessed at least one folder on a server that contained personally identifiable information.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal and Campus Technology. She can be reached at dian@dischaffhauser.com or on Twitter @schaffhauser.